Fly
on the Wall
Harish
Gupta
Spy
vs Spy: Delhi’s Surveillance Politics Explodes
In
geopolitics, lessons travel fast. Ever since reports surfaced that
Israeli intelligence agencies tracked and eliminated top Iranian
leadership by mapping vehicle movements, a quiet paranoia has gripped
power corridors in Delhi. Suddenly, CCTV cameras are no longer just
about traffic violations or street crime—they are potential
instruments of political intelligence. In the Capital, this unease
has snowballed into a full-blown surveillance slugfest between Aam
Aadmi Party and BJP.
What
began as a flagship public safety project under Arvind Kejriwal—with
lakhs of cameras blanketing the city—is now being systematically
dismantled. The BJP, now calling the shots, has ordered a sweeping
reset: scrap the old network, float fresh tenders, bring in new spy
machines. The official trigger? Security concerns over Chinese-origin
equipment, especially from Hikvision. In an era of heightened cyber
anxieties, the argument has some weight. But scratch the surface, and
a more political story emerges. The BJP’s unease is blunt: a
surveillance grid built, controlled, and calibrated under AAP could
double up as a political listening post. Why inherit a system you
don’t trust?
The
AAP's counter-charge is equally sharp—that the BJP wants its own
digital eyes and ears, a tailor-made network to watch rivals, not
just wrongdoers. The numbers tell their own story. Nearly 1.4 lakh
cameras—many installed between 2020 and 2022—are being ripped
out. This isn’t maintenance; it’s demolition with intent. The
larger question, then, is not just about Chinese hardware or public
safety. In Delhi, the CCTV is no longer just a
camera on the wall. It’s a lens into power, paranoia, and the
politics of who watches whom.
Priyanka
Chaturvedi at the Crossroads
Is
Priyanka Chaturvedi scripting a comeback via the Lok Sabha, or
angling for another Rajya Sabha innings? With her Upper House term
from Shiv Sena (UBT) over, the chatter in political corridors is
getting louder—and juicier. The buzz has a clear geographical
anchor: Mathura. It’s not just sentiment. Chaturvedi hails from
here and her recent visit has set tongues wagging. The seat is
currently held by Hema Malini, but by 2029, age could redraw the
BJP’s calculus, opening a tempting window.
But
the real intrigue lies in the party tag. Will she stay loyal, switch
sides, or hedge her bets? Signals are mixed. One track suggests a
Rajya Sabha re-entry with possible backing from the Samajwadi Party,
which is eyeing gains in the upcoming Uttar Pradesh RS polls. With
numbers on its side, the SP could bag multiple seats—but not
without resistance from the BJP.
Yet,
there’s a twist. Akhilesh Yadav is reportedly more keen to test her
electoral heft in Mathura than park her in the Rajya Sabha. Back
channel voices may prefer a safe RS berth, but the SP chief seems to
favour a riskier, high-reward Lok Sabha gamble.
Meanwhile,
equations with her current party remain less than warm. From flirting
with a saffron switch to exploring the UP route, every option is on
the table. One thing is clear: her next move could be less about
loyalty—and more about survival and ambition.
Price
Tag Politics: How Much for Power?
A
19-minute “sting” clip has detonated like a political landmine in
West Bengal. Released by the Trinamool Congress, it alleges that
Humayun Kabir of the Aam Janata Unnayan Party struck a staggering
₹1,000 crore deal with the BJP to split minority votes in
Murshidabad and Malda ahead of the 2026 Assembly polls. Kabir first
dismissed it as AI fakery, then conceded the clip was real—only
“edited & incomplete.” The BJP has waved it off as theatrics.
Truth, as always, sits somewhere behind the noise, waiting.
But
the deeper tremor comes from an unlikely quarter. Birendra Singh who
was in the first Modi Cabinet for five years, has cut through the fog
with a blunt observation: a leader “worth” ₹20 crore is pushed
into delirium when the BJP pays Rs 50 crore.
What
does this moment reveal? Not just the presence of money power—that
is old news—but its breathtaking scale and normalization. Elections
are no longer merely contests of ideology or identity; they risk
becoming high-stakes financial markets where loyalties are traded,
constituencies are segmented, and outcomes are engineered with
capital.
The
alleged ₹1,000 crore figure, whether proven or not, is symbolic. It
signals a shift—from retail corruption to wholesale political
investment. In such a marketplace, voters are reduced to data points,
and democracy to a negotiable instrument. The last word on this
controversy may still be unwritten. But one question now demands an
answer: when the price of power keeps rising, who—or what—gets
sold first?
The
Reluctant Warrior
Assembly
elections are underway in two major states—West Bengal and Tamil
Nadu. Polling for 152 seats in Bengal and all 234 seats in Tamil Nadu
is scheduled for April 23. PM Modi has unleashed an aggressive
campaign blitz. Home Minister Amit Shah has announced a 15-day ground
push in Bengal.
In
sharp contrast, Rahul Gandhi has largely stayed away from Tamil Nadu
campaigning so far. He has not been particularly visible in
Bengal either. He is finally visited West Bengal on Tuestday,
April 14 and may visit one more time. But along with Priyanka Gandhi
Vadra, his focus has remained on Kerala, Puducherry and Assam—even
there, without matching Modi’s intensity. The BJP, despite
modest prospects in Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, the party has
mounted a full-scale effort.
Congress,
however, seems to be going through the motions. Though it is
contesting more seats in TN in alliance with the DMK, its top
leadership’s late push looks largely symbolic. In Bengal, where it
is contesting widely after decades, expectations remain modest
despite pockets of hope in Murshidabad and Malda.